Karen Armstrong’s wish comes true…

A TED Prize wish fulfilled: 

Charter for Compassion launches

Karen brain storming

Today, we celebrate the unveiling of the Charter for Compassion, a document created to unite people of different religions and moral codes by acknowledging our shared principles of love, understanding and compassion.

The Charter grew out of Karen Armstrong’s 2008 TED Prize wish. Since that time, over 150,000 people from 180 countries have contributed their words, 18 prominent religious leaders have refined these words — and the world is now invited to affirm, celebrate and discuss the final document. Read andaffirm the Charter below:

CHARTER FOR COMPASSION

The principle of compassion lies at the heart of all religious, ethical and spiritual traditions, calling us always to treat all others as we wish to be treated ourselves. Compassion impels us to work tirelessly to alleviate the suffering of our fellow creatures, to dethrone ourselves from the centre of our world and put another there, and to honour the inviolable sanctity of every single human being, treating everybody, without exception, with absolute justice, equity and respect.

It is also necessary in both public and private life to refrain consistently and empathically from inflicting pain. To act or speak violently out of spite, chauvinism or self-interest, to impoverish, exploit or deny basic rights to anybody, and to incite hatred by denigrating others — even our enemies — is a denial of our common humanity. We acknowledge that we have failed to live compassionately and that some have even increased the sum of human misery in the name of religion.

We therefore call upon all men and women ~ to restore compassion to the centre of morality and religion ~ to return to the ancient principle that any interpretation of scripture that breeds violence, hatred or disdain is illegitimate ~ to ensure that youth are given accurate and respectful information about other traditions, religions and cultures ~ to encourage a positive appreciation of cultural and religious diversity ~ to cultivate an informed empathy with the suffering of all human beings, even those regarded as enemies.

We urgently need to make compassion a clear, luminous and dynamic force in our polarized world. Rooted in a principled determination to transcend selfishness, compassion can break down political, dogmatic, ideological and religious boundaries. Born of our deep interdependence, compassion is essential to human relationships and to a fulfilled humanity. It is the path to enlightenment, and indispensible to the creation of a just economy and a peaceful global community.

 

Karen Armstrong
Karen Armstrong FRSL is a British author and commentator known for her books on comparative religion. A former Roman Catholic religious sister, she went from a conservative to a more liberal and mystical Christian faith.
Source: Wikipedia.
Born: November 14, 1944 (age 68), Worcestershire
Education: University of Oxford, St Anne’s College, Oxford

 


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Happy?

happy faces

Great illustration…
Only that the usual fake masks of happiness people wear cost a LOT more than 4 euros.
People realize at last that they are covering up their unhappiness with expensive substitutes; you know, the always updated cars and phones and ski gear, vacations of running away or exploring, new fashion in fashion, movies, games and tv, and they think, “Hell with it, I know, they know. All I needed was a smiley mask anyway.”

At 4 Euros, and reusable… a bargain!

I guess maybe thats why these happy face masks sold out…
Well thats great because those left with their very own sad faces have to face the storm and survive it. And they can.

The guy in the front sems to have gotten a defect happy face… doubly sad for him i guess… but maybe also a good point… Maybe its reflecting how he feels under the surface of the mask.

But unlike depicted in this illustration people will never run out of their cheap way to the mask of happiness… that IS the problem… i wish we did run out and we had to deal with it… but there is money to be made folks and somebody a long time ago has figured out the weakness of homo sapiens. Well I dont think it was done on purpose… has a lot to do with our animal instincts; you know looking good, attracting a mate…

Imagine if bad pop reporting, television, food and computer games were banned tomorrow… and if everything around us just made us look inside to face our problems and learn to find ourselves and be happy for real.
WOW!!! Now THAT be a world id be willing to bring babies to…

This whole website is dedicated to the search of ultimate human happiness.
The maximum possible in our state of evolution that is… I am approaching this idea form many angles and trying to build a study… Its far from perfectly structured yet… Please bear with me…

Your comments and responses are greatly appreciated and needed.

Posted in Philosophy, Psychology | 2 Responses

Whats Next?

Ted.com – Question Of the Day.

Hard Times but still Good times are coming… Thats just my positive outlook on life,
but “Whats Next?” IS a big question… Huge…

The answer should be easy, like tomorrow, or even, closing up shop and going home to rest, sleep, watch a movie. But somehow i don think the guy who submitted this would approve of a simple and obvious answer like that to this two word but loaded question.

As my mind always roams; when i think of whats next, I get a barrage of thoughts… like a bunch of little children who want to be thrown up in the air yet again; “me, me, me, again, once more, please, me, again…”

There are so many variable to whats next. It almost hurts.

Well, next is definitely getting some answers about what´s happening with my current business affairs.
So that i can organize my busy life around those facts. Making a list of “Whats Next´s?”
All kind of depends on that now.

But i think thats actually going to take another month, so, in the meantime I ought to find out some other answers to another question i have been having for a long long time…
Do I have ADHD.
This is a fun quote from Wiki “ADHD is classified as a disruptive behavior disorder along with oppositional defiant disorder, conduct disorder and antisocial disorder.”
: )
“Anti”Social disorder… i seriously doubt that : ) but maybe a little bit of all of the rest…
: )

Anyway… see what happened now… I was thinking what´s next and found out that i had another next before what i had thought was the next…

It does help to slow down and ask ones self quietly these questions…
Ill call my physician tomorrow and see if i can get a test.

PS. My comment below turns out to be a excerpt from the wiki article about ADHD, comments and link to the long wiki article.

Slow down now and answer me this;
Whats your Next?

Posted in Question Of The Day, Ted | 1 Response

Special Report: The Best News for Planet Earth in Decades

Source. Good News Network

posted by geri
Thursday, 23 April 2009

I asked one question to leading environmentalists who are usually keen to point out what is wrong with the environment: What is the good news in the last dozen years for planet Earth?

Historically there is good news. Within two years of the first Earth Day in 1970 a slew of major legislation was passed — the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, establishment of the EPA, the ban on DDT, and the reduction of lead from paint — all of which delivered monumental benefit to the environment.

But what have we done for the planet lately? Here are the top seven favors we’ve done for Mother Earth in the last 12 years …

The #1 Good News Trend: Action on Global Warming
Lisa Jackson, the new Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, joins the majority of those I spoke to in giving the nod to the new worldwide public consensus that has developed around Global Warming.

“In the last decade the world has united around tackling climate change, which will impact people from Micronesia to the Florida Keys to the Sahara. There is a growing, global commitment to fight climate change and build a green economy. That will lead to further cooperation among nations to tackle other threats to our health and our planet – and that is truly good news for our Earth.”

Randy Serraglio, of the Center for Biological Diversity, agrees. “In the last decade a consensus has emerged within the international scientific community that global climate disruption is underway, is caused by humans, and threatens very serious consequences if we do not deal with it.” The good news, says Serraglio, is the consensus has pushed even corporations toward aggressive action to ward off the worst of those consequences.

The editorial staff at Treehugger recognized Al Gore’s Oscar-award-winning movie An Inconvenient Truth and the UK’s Stern Report as major influences. “These two events have done much more to engage the general populace to really acknowledge the environmental pressures we face than have decades of dry reporting and NGO ‘the-sky-is-falling’ campaigning.” The worldwide Live Earth concerts, staged around the world on 07.07.07, added to the “positive tipping point” for climate change to become a mainstream media topic.

The Natural Resources Defense Council says one of the top events of the decade was the EPA’s landmark affirmation this month formally announcing that global warming pollutants are a threat to public health. “By announcing that carbon and other global warming pollutants pose a threat to public health, EPA sets in motion the process of regulating those pollutants, which has to be one of the major advances in public health and environmental protection since the 1970s.”

Consensus grew out of the United Nations in 2007 when nearly 200 countries agreed to accelerate the elimination of chemicals that threaten the ozone and exacerbate global warming. United Nations Environmental Program chief Achim Steiner hailed the agreement by governments, especially China who moved quickly to ban dangerous hydrochlorofluorocarbons, as a “vital signal” in efforts to slow climate change.

“Historic is an often over-used word but not in the case of this agreement made in Montreal,” said Steiner. “It is perhaps the most important breakthrough in an international setting for at least five or six years.”

#2 Positive Development: Renewable Energy Hits its Stride
Nick Nuttall, a spokesperson for the UNEP sees a new era of commitment to green causes. “The international community has rolled out a wide range of un-brokered agreements over the years designed to tackle biodiversity loss, climate change, chemical pollution, ozone layer loss and desertification. Previously, the scale of the response had failed to match the magnitude of the challenge. But over the last 12 months some countries have begun to factor-in the economic costs of environmental degradation and seize the opportunities of transiting to resource efficient, low carbon societies. If this can be scaled up and accelerated and the three trillion dollars-worth of stimulus packages can be spent wisely and creatively, there is now the chance for a transition to a truly Green 21st century economy.”

In answering our survey, Jeff Mikulina, Executive Director of the Blue Planet Foundation and former director of the Sierra Club in Hawaii, naturally wanted to nominate the tremendous progress and growth in clean energy development — solar and wind, in particular. But, Blue Planet is not the only group (non-profit or commercial) to spring up in the past decade powered up by a mission to end the use of fossil fuels.

Treehugger also gave a nod in this direction arguing, “We have finally reached the point where renewable energy from solar and wind have hit the competitive pricing point.”

#3 The Internet: a Greening Force

Jane Goodall, the famous Primatologist and anthropologist, thinks the fact that so many people are using their lives to make a difference, every day, is most amazing and worthy of note. Helping them make this change has been the rise of the World Wide Web.

“I believe the most most positive trend has been the rapid and organic growth of communications technologies,” says Blue Planet’s Mikulina. “While this ‘tech” might seem antithetical to the theme of low-energy use and sustainability, the power to connect with people and share information has proven a potent tool for social change.”

It is far easier today to organize individuals and groups with shared values and direct that energy toward democratic action, especially with YouTube, Facebook and blogging. Treehugger points to the use of tools like Digg, Stumble Upon, and Twitter as critical for broadcasting seeds of motivation across a wide area. “Green bloggers are reaching an ever increasing audience, partly by working with their peers/competitors to push green stories in front of many, many eyes.”

“The ability to more easily create and share content enables more people to participate in networks, access a broader knowledge base, and engage in activities that reward the value of collective action,” said Mikulina. “Connections, information and communication, I believe, are fostering greater awareness and hope, and making our living on Earth more sustainable.” (Image above, by Ryan O. Hicks, Perdue University)

#4 Protecting the Amazon

For the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), the best news for planet Earth came in 2002 when WWF partnered with the Brazilian Government and others to launch the world’s largest tropical forest conservation program. The clumsily named Amazon Region Protected Areas program carves out 12 years of strict preservation and sustainable use reserves, including the establishment of over 62 million acres of new protected areas – a swath about the size of Wyoming. The final phase will be implemented beginning in 2009 and will create 50 million acres of newly protected land. Comparable to the U.S. National Park System, yet 50 percent larger, the program will surpass the U.S. National Wildlife Refuge System in sheer numbers of bird, mammal, fish, reptile, and amphibian species protected.

#5 Getting the Lead Out

Effective January 1, 1996, the Clean Air Act banned the sale of the small amount of leaded fuel that was still available in some parts of the country for use in on-road vehicles. In addition, from 2001-2008, a suite of EPA diesel rules will collectively reduce diesel particulate soot and smog-forming pollution by more than 90 percent.

“This is the biggest vehicle pollution news since the removal of lead from gasoline, and will lead to the most significant national public health advance in a generation, said Richard Kassel, director of NRDC’s Dump Dirty Diesel’s campaign. “In terms of cost-effectiveness to the public health, this suite of rules is the biggest regulatory advance in the last 40 years. Collectively, these rules will, by 2030, prevent more than 21,000 premature deaths and more than $160 billion in health costs annually.”

#6 Higher Fuel Efficiency Standards, At Last

Congress strengthened vehicle fuel-efficiency standards for the first time in 30 years with the passage of the Energy Independence and Security Act on December 18, 2007. The bill includes measures to save Americans money at the gas pump and cut down on global warming pollution. “We handed Congress an ambitious agenda at the beginning of 2007, and the bill represents real progress in achieving cleaner cars, fuels, and appliances,” said Karen Wayland, legislative director at NRDC.

The Act sets a goal for the national fuel economy standard of 35 miles per gallon (mpg) by 2020, an increase of 40 percent that would also save the country billions of gallons of fuel.

#7 Sweeping Conservation of Wild Lands by Clinton, Obama — and Bush
Each of the last three presidents, Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton have left a major mark on land use and conservation in the United States. Starting with Clinton, the NRDC points to his historic issuance of the Roadless Rule (Roadless Areas Conservation Rule), which protected 58.5 million acres of unspoiled national-forest land in 39 states from virtually all road building and logging.

In Bush’s final days in the White House, a stroke of his pen designated three new areas in the Pacific as Marine National Monuments to create the largest area of ocean protection in the world, measuring 195,000 square miles and preventing the destruction of some of the world’s most pristine natural resources, rich in biodiversity. The three areas include the Mariana Trench and the waters surrounding three uninhabited islands in the Northern Mariana Islands, Rose Atoll in American Samoa and seven islands along the equator in the central Pacific Ocean. Bush had created the largest protected marine sanctuary in the world once before, two and a half years earlier, preserving nearly 140,000 square miles in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Home to 7000 marine species, at least a quarter of which are found nowhere else, the expansive Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument is larger than all US National Parks combined, stretching a distance not unlike Chicago to Florida.

Less than one month ago, Obama signed into law one of the most sweeping conservation and public land management bills in years. The legislation will protect 2 million acres of wilderness across the country, including 1,000 miles of wild and scenic rivers, by creating a national system to conserve land held by our Bureau of Land Management.

Reaching Beyond the Environmental Movement

Long established environmental groups have had to evolve too. With years of litigation under their belt and societal change swirling around their computers, environmental activists and conservation organizations are realizing that to achieve fundamental and lasting change, they cannot continue to work exclusively within a narrow slice of politics and culture.
“If we are at odds with other progressive elements in society, or even if we just ignore their perspectives and concerns or fail to make the effort to gain their support, we risk undermining or stalling progress on environmental issues,” the Center for Biological Diversity’s Randy Serraglio told the Good News Network. “Conservation groups are increasingly working in coalition with labor, human rights, and other groups to achieve the common goal of a just and healthy world.”

Mark Tercek, president and CEO of The Nature Conservancy is a believer in the maxim that necessity is the mother of invention. “We are in the midst of the kind of necessity in which the Conservancy excels and is most inventive. A glance at the highlights of the last 10 years only hint at what is possible in the coming years: conservation on a grander scale, more ambitious partnerships, an increased integration of human well-being into conservation and an expansion of market solutions across continents and the planet.”

Like EPA Administrator Jackson pointed out, “That is truly good news for our Earth.”

Posted in Good News Network.org | 1 Response

Encourage Gratitude in Your Young

posted by Geri.

“An important but seldom-taught lesson is the value of gratitude. In a culture like ours, where the norm is always to want more, it’s important to encourage children — especially teens — to think about being thankful and to feel fortunate for what they already have. When they do, they often get a boost of happiness and optimism. So do adults, claim researchers.”

Posted in Choices, Good News Network.org, Psychology | 1 Response

Shame I missed it… almost!!!

nothing very important… unless you are nuts…
I found it kind of nostalgic… i dont know why…

So i intend to catch the 7th of august happening…

12:34:56   07.08.09

its just a silly thing : )

View more news videos at: http://www.nbcbayarea.com/video.

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How are you nurturing yourself?

Only partially Im afraid.
I am concentrating too much on my thoughts, learning and inner space all the while knowing that a healthy mind exists in a healthy body.
We ought to learn a lot more about nutrition and listen to what our bodies are telling us it needs…
Fruit, vegetables, motion… and we ought to respect those needs to be able to continue to do what we love doing in good health for the longest possible time.
I in fact think this ought to be a priority for us all… Dont you think this is the stating point? Its like putting gas in the car, making sure the tires arent flat and that all the lights are working.
We ought to be educated in nutrition and health much earlier in life; BEFORE we develop the bad habits of eating only what we want and all too quickly, and get used to being lazy and taking the buss rather than walking… (at least i walk, and bike a lot : )
I ought to go back to yoga and perhaps a little active training… and back to fruits and vegetables… believe you me my body HAS told me i should ; )

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What would life look like without creativity?

If we take “creativity” as human creativity, then life would look like it would if we erased all sign of humans on Earth.

We would not have evolved if our brains did not developed that curious gene, the wondering gene which makes us creative.

We are constantly wondering and searching for answers. And our tool of showing our abstract wonderings and feelings is our art.

While if we consider universe a creative mechanism then i guess maybe life would not have existed at all without the billions of years of universal trial, error and what we call creation.

Posted in Question Of The Day | 1 Response

a lot happening… A LOT and ALL the time…

Vegard was just in showing incredible enthusiasm to help me shape up this site and make it functional and elegant at the same time…
He has more than one way he excites me…
: )

We have come up with a very good idea for an intro page. Im very excited about it…

Tomorrow is the last day that i have any free time for the next ten days… Tamer is going to Dubai and ill be slavin.. fun fun fun…

So the plan for tomorrow is to clean house, go by the bank and hopefully snowboard in the evening… I have to take extra gd care not to break anything tomorrow… it would be a lousy thing to do to Tamer…

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Its late and its almost nice…

There is still a lot to learn about WordPressing, but i think I managed more than i expected…
Will soon try editing and messing up the templates : )
fun : )

l.
endless-ocean-ss

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Response